getfiscal posted:hmm... i hear you marjory but i'm not sure i like the idea of handing over our food supply to robots. seems like a good way to get genocided by the machines.
well we are being responsive to OP, donald
roseweird posted:technology doesn't cause problems, it is just scapegoated for human problems by humans who forget that technology does not actually have a life of its own.
i like how the second part is a non-sequitur to the first part
gyrofry posted:what if there was a linkedin for revolutionaries
http://uk.linkedin.com/pub/julian-assange/32/671/804?trk=pub-pbmap
roseweird posted:technology doesn't cause problems, it is just scapegoated for human problems by humans who forget that technology does not actually have a life of its own.
you should read question concerning technology, but you won't because your utopia depends on it.
roseweird posted:perhaps sufficiently advanced automation can include not just single varieties planted over and over, but profiles of crops and rotations in accordance with soil conditions... i think we can probably apply ecology to automation in a way that will eventually make machines better and more ecological farmers than humans, on account of their finer ability to sense and respond to precise soil and atmospheric conditions
there's nothing technically wrong with this, like i can't point to something and say "that's not true", but it's also just basically saying "well i bet technology can somehow improve agriculture, can't really tell you how or point to anything specific, i dont have any facts, but i would guess thats the case" which doesnt really say much of anything at all
hents, my thread about making less people. how to add negative six billion people to the planet. probably more. i think there should be maybe 1-2 million people